This fiery beauty steals the
show with rich, bright orange blooms that refuse to be ignored. Starting the
show just as most other daylilies are winding down, Lady Lucille displays a
sequence of flashy 5-6" diameter blooms on well branched 22-30" tall
bloomstalks from summer into autumn. Shiny, 15-20" tall dark green foliage
contrasts dramatically with the brilliant blooms, and remains lush even on
sweltering summer days. Pest and disease resistant, Lady Lucille is
eyecatching when planted singly, and breathtaking in a mass display. Hardy
USDA Zones 4-10. PPAF.

“Chorus Line”

Compact Height - Blooms at 18-22"

30-120 Bloom Days per Year
(Average 50 Days)

Beautifully Formed, Fragrant
Blooms

Tidy
Foliage Provides Beautiful Border

Masses of blooms offer a
splendid display of color for this All-American winner in the Exhibition
category. Fragrant, well-formed round blooms with wide ruffled petals. The
3-4" blooms are medium pink with a darker rose band around a small chartreuse
throat, borne on well-branched, 20-25" tall scapes. Blooms start early in the
season and rebloom in USDA Zone 6 and up (two rebloom cycles in Zone 9-10).
Tidy 15-20" tall foliage and delicate bouquets of blooms provide a cheerful
greeting along a garden path, in a pot or at the front of the perennial bed. A
nice edging for rose beds. Deciduous foliage is cold hardy down to at least
USDA Zone 4.Hardy USDA zones 4-10.

ABOUT AADSC

The soaring popularity of
daylilies, combined with the bewildering profusion of varieties and growing
characteristics, demanded the development of a standard for daylily
excellence. The All-American Daylily Selection Council, organized to address
this demand, now coordinates a testing program which evaluates daylilies on
over 50 performance characteristics across a nationwide network of test sites.
This rigorous testing has produced comprehensive and surprising results. Who
would have thought, for example, that a daylily bred in Texas would have been
a top bloomer in Wisconsin, or that one from Missouri would perform so well in
the heat of Southern California?

There are more than 48,000 daylilies registered, bred in at least 25 states,
by hundreds of individual hybridizers. Using its elaborate testing program,
the AADSC sorts through the thousands of registered daylilies and awards to
only the top performers across five USDA hardiness zones the coveted title of
"All American."

Each year's scores are measured against all previous test data in order to
ensure that the All-Americans are truly the best performers in their color
category. Daylilies are tested for at least two years, with All-American
finalists being grown for another three to five years in open field conditions
before being announced.

2003 marks another year of new All-American daylily winners offering gardeners
throughout the country a steady stream of these tried and tested perennial
beauties. Gardeners nationwide can expect to see these proven daylilies at
their garden center and grow them successfully in virtually any garden in
America. Backed by scientifically proven superior performance nationwide,
All-American Daylilies are becoming America's preferred perennial.